The European Commission on Thursday
officially declared Spain and Portugal in violation of the EU rules on
government overspending, the first step towards unprecedented penalties against
members of the 28-country bloc.
"The Commission confirms that Spain and Portugal
will not correct their excessive deficits by the recommended deadline,"
the EU's executive arm said in a statement.
If endorsed by the EU's finance ministers, the commission
is then legally obliged to propose fines against the two neighbouring
countries, which were both hit hard by the financial crisis.
"Lately, the two countries have veered off track in
the correction of their excessive deficits and have not met their budgetary
targets," said Valdis Dombrovskis, the EU Commission's vice-president in
charge of the euro.
"We stand ready to work together with the Spanish
and Portuguese authorities to define the best path ahead," he said.
Many EU powers led by Germany have long hoped for the
commission to finally crack down on public overspenders, but with populist
fires burning after the Brexit vote, ministers meeting in Brussels on Tuesday
could decide to delay their immediate endorsement.
"There is uncertainty creeping in light of the UK
vote result," an EU diplomat told AFP.
France and Italy will be the most willing to delay the
penalty process, fearing that their own years of EU rule breaking would put
them next in line for a sanction by Brussels.
Ahead of the commission announcement, Portuguese Prime
Minister Antonio Costa warned that Brussels would foster a rise in
euroscepticism in Portugal if EU sanctions are applied.
In a letter to the European Commission, Costa cited
"the results of the UK referendum and its impact on the European
Union" as reasons why the Commission should refrain from full
implementation of the rules.
Representative
Image
Source: France24
ConversionConversion EmoticonEmoticon